By Ric Bang
Buy CD: From the Hip
This quartet features
artists who aren’t household names to the general public, but are quite well
known in the jazz world.
All have played in
numerous name groups during their careers, and all have quite lengthy
discographies. Pianist David Kikoski, a Berklee College of Music grad, was a
member of the Woody Herman Alumni Band, and Charles Mingus’ Big Band and
Orchestra; he also worked with Chick Corea, both Brecker brothers and numerous
other familiar artists. Bassist Dave Carpenter spent time with Buddy Rich,
Woody Herman, Maynard Ferguson and many others. Saxophonist Bob Sheppard has
shared a stage with Herbie Hancock, Joni Mitchell and Stevie Wonder; drummer
Gary Novak’s sessions have been headed by the likes of Corea, George Benson and
Lee Rittenour.
As would be expected from
four musicians with such varied experience, the result is primo jazz. This
album was recorded in front of a relatively small studio audience in 2006. (The
lengthy period from studio to public release isn’t uncommon.) There was no
rehearsal, merely the desire to create something that each artist “felt like
doing at the moment.” Five of these nine tracks are beloved standards: “Star Eyes,” “My One and Only Love,” “How Deep Is the Ocean,” “If You Could See Me Now” and “Autumn Leaves.” The others hail from less familiar jazz
charts: Coltrane’s “Mr. P.C.,”
Corea’s “Tones for Joan’s Bones,” Cedar Walton’s “Bolivia” and Toninho Horta’s “From Ton to Tom.”
The performances utilize
meters ranging from ballad to mid- and up-tempos; the common thread is that
everything swings nicely, and the rhythm section is particularly tight.
It should be noted that,
shortly after this session, Carpenter suffered a fatal heart attack. He’ll
be missed.
As often is the
case with artists of this caliber, even though the music is familiar, their
interpretation of each song makes everything new again. As I’ve noted
previously, I’d love to have a group like this close enough to home, in order
to enjoy them regularly ... and in person.
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